If They Can Make it Here: T Profiles Six Young NY Design Firms

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We wanted to make sure you didn’t miss T Magazine’s Design and Living Winter 2010 issue, especially “If They Can Make it Here,” Monica Khemsurov’s cover story “singling out half a dozen young designers who are making it in the Big Apple.” These include RISD grads Rich, Brilliant and Willing (right), who have just released a series of lamps for Artecnica (among other things), and Jonas Damon, an industrial designer that’s mostly worked behind the scenes, once for Tom Dixon and now as Creative Director of Frog Design.

The others are Leon Ransmeier of dba, Roanne Adams of Refinery29, Commonwealth, and Rafael de Cárdenas. Read more here.

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Design Store Moss Seized for Nonpayment of Taxes

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Photo by Alan G. Brake.

This is sure to send a wave through the design community: Moss, the influential design store and gallery located in New York’s SoHo, has been seized by the State of New York for nonpayment of taxes—perhaps foreshadowed in Murray Moss’s essay Design Hates a Depression, as pointed out by the Architect’s Newspaper early this morning, who discovered the shop closed with a tax compliance notice on the door. They’ve done their due diligence and canvassed a few sources, including Moss hiimself, who, on the prospect that the store will go bankrupt, has to say: “100% NOT TRUE! Will send letter to you shortly…but we’re not going anywhere…!”

Read the full article at the Architect’s Newspaper, where they’ve promised to post the letter from Moss as soon as they receive it.

Update from Racked NY: A letter sent midday by Murray Moss and Franklin Getchell assure fans and customers that the closure is due to a paperwork misfiling, not imminent financial closure, though they are taking steps, as we all are, to run their business better.

As explained to us yesterday, mid-day, during an unexpected visit by officials from the NY State Tax Department, due to our failure to file a document (one of literally hundreds!) with the Department, an official, non-negotiable ‘procedure’ was triggered, whereby Moss was required to temporarily close…

Because we’ve all been in dialogue, we know that many of you, like Moss, during the severe economic downturn of the past two years, in addition to possibly downsizing where logical, until growth is again possible, have entered into negotiations with various business partners, as well as the State, to arrive at mutually acceptable financial arrangements which make sense and allow for a stable, doable plan going forward. We have put financing in place, adjusted our overhead, and re-evaluated our projections, and are ready to go forward. This is to re-iterate to our friends: we are, in short, ok.

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The Dutch Invertuals Transform Medieval Oak Wood into New Design Projects

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Top: 600 year old oak timber. Bottom: Julien Carretero’s Matchsticks.

This year, the group of designers behind the loose collective Dutch Invertuals had the opportunity to work with a magnificent material: Oak wood that dates back to Medieval Times, forming the foundation to the EIndhoven city entrance over 600 years ago, and excavated only recently.

Each individual studio has conducted their own experiments and research, “translating the value and symbolism of the wood into contemporary design project,” focusing especially on ideas bout time and the oak’s unique material properties. They exhibited their findings together at a show entitled Matter of Time during Dutch Design Week.

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Fjaril drawers

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Drawers designed by Jakob Jorgensen that pull out in a unique way. I wouldn’t use these to file anything I’d want to retrieve ever again, because remembering which drawer’s for what seems impossible. But they look great.

Via: TheLetter

5.5 Designers

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Four designers working in Paris to ’sublimate the ordinary’ with ‘humor and simplicity’…

The first project I’ve included, ‘Rangement Maslow’, should ring a bell for anyone who’s ever taken a first year psych class. Inspired by Maslow’s hierarchy, this piece is designed to accommodate the varying sizes of our storage needs. The drawers can be moved into any configuration, making it totally customizable. The simplicity of it’s execution is wonderful, the streamlined structures that result from different drawer variations make this piece playfully unique.

The second project is called ‘3 Sets’, designed for Roland Garros’ annual tournament. Below is one of the stools being corded by Laurent Lucas, followed by the full set (showing the ball-tube-inspired decanter and scoreboard). The stools are a brilliant concept, I wonder how comfortable they are?

Sauerbruch Hutton

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One of the few architectural firms that does a great job integrating a vibrant colour pallet into their work. Pics after the jump.

Located in Berlin, Sauerbruch Hutton is a 100 person company operating since ‘89. They have an impressive portfolio worth spending some time clicking through.

Traveling with Furniture. Literally

Hmm… This innovative concept design by designer Erik De Nijs functions as luggage, but can be converted into a comfy set of stylish furniture for those extended layovers.

De Nijs explains his thinking behind the project:

The ‘suited case’ is a project which is inspired on the idea of people waiting during their trip. People often go and rest sitting on their suitcases, that is the starting point of this design.


Chair Typography

Artist, Joseph Kosuth uses type forms to construct this innovative piece. To see additional work from the artist you know the drill.

via:

Sit Down

Command Sit, a big keyboard stackable chair for indoor/outdoor use. Hmmm.

via:

Coming Out by ZMIK

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Better late than never # 1: Coming Out is a collection of prototypes by Swiss designers Zmik, exhibited at V-Gallery in Basel, Switzerland, last year. (more…)